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The H.E.A.R.T. of the matter

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We are sometimes asked about our business slogan, “Developing the H.E.A.R.T. of your business” and the meaning of the acronym.  Literally, it refers to the values of Honesty, Empathy, Acceptance, Respect and Trust – and volumes could be written about each of those values!  Symbolically, it represents that which gives life and maintains rhythm, warmth, circulation, connection and unity.

Bringing the two together, we believe that values are what determine the health of any organisation: whether it has an open flow of communication or hardening arteries and worn valves; whether there is genuine caring, encouragement, support and acceptance or an unfriendly, antagonistic stoniness; and whether all parts of the system flourish with fresh ideas and inspired action or wither and fall off along the wayside.

Traditionally, references to the heart were more commonly associated with romance and perhaps the more frivolous, less cerebral aspects of life.  There was no place for “warm fuzzies” and excitement in the world of handshakes and the stiff upper lip.  We are all familiar with phrases such as “weak-hearted”, “soft-hearted”, “big-hearted”, “faint-hearted”, “heart flutters”, “heartfelt”, “hearty”, “heart rending”, “heart of gold” and so on, and their warm and fuzzy implications.

Words like love and happiness also had a hard time fitting comfortably into business and the workplace.  They implied softness, weakness and a lack of backbone and focus.  “Hard-nosed” and “bloody-minded” on the other hand tended to indicate a no-nonsense, serious determination by someone – generally male – who means business.

More and more, however, the business world is beginning to recognise that in order to innovate, inspire and orchestrate successful business outcomes, the intellect and the heart must work together.  They are no less interdependent than heart and lungs.  Dualities such as male and female, yin and yang, heart and head merge into synergistic holism.

There is also greater recognition that the health and wellbeing of individuals and their relationships with one another contribute to the overall health of business and achievement of successful outcomes.

Over the past 20 to 30 years, Daniel Goleman author of Emotional Intelligence[1] and others have highlighted the importance of EI alongside IQ, increasing the respectability of emotions in the boardroom.  Business becomes humanised as its people and the relationships between them are valued equally with, if not above, inanimate systems and other resources.  Emotional maturity and positive connections with people are the lifeblood that keeps those systems alive.

Poor communications between people result in a breakdown between elements of the system and lost productivity.  Ineffective leadership results in a loss of rhythm, cohesion and momentum and contributes to divisiveness, a lack of direction, motivation and cooperation and problems with retention.  High staff turnover results in a continual leaking of energy, knowledge and skills, weakening the overall system and undermining profits.

Kouzes and Posner, authors of The Leadership Challenge[2] and Encouraging the Heart[3], claim that people are not motivated by money but rather by a leader who cares!

Through their research on best practice leadership, they found that exemplary leaders who achieve extraordinary things:

  • Challenge the process
  • Inspire a shared vision
  • Enable others to act
  • Model the way
  • Encourage the heart

It is perhaps no surprise that they had difficulty finding resources that give practical support to the fifth principle, “Encourage the heart” – hence, their book by that name. In fact, they even found resistance to the terminology and its association with “softness”.

The authors take a very hard line with regard to this principle however and firmly assert,

…we not only demonstrate that encouraging the heart is not soft; we show how powerful a force it is in achieving high standards and stretch goals.  If you’re after results, then you’d better start paying attention to encouraging the heart (p.xiv).

Encourage the Heart outlines the fundamental principles for engaging, motivating and inspiring the commitment, cooperation, contribution and retention of staff.  It could probably all be summed up quite simply in a rather “soft” statement: Make each person feel special!  Kouzes and Posner outline the Seven Essentials for Encouraging the Heart and 150 practical ideas for achieving these.

Yes, people need money.  But moreover, they need to be appreciated as individuals, recognised for their unique contribution and achievements, encouraged to take risks and aim high and always treated with respect and dignity.

Kouzes and Posner admit that encouraging the heart and learning to lead in an exemplary way is not easy. It goes beyond technique, training, copying and advice and requires a type of purification through fire.  It requires “surrender … exhausting experimentation and often painful suffering … [to discover] an expression of self that is truly your own … to emerge into the light, where you find your own true voice” (p.148).

Finally… they draw on the words of John H. Stanford, a former US Major General, who claims that “the secret to success is to stay in love”.

Staying in love gives you the fire to really ignite other people, to see inside other people, to have a greater desire to get things done than other people.  A person who is not in love doesn’t really feel the kind of excitement that helps them to get ahead and lead others and to achieve.  I don’t know of any other fire, any other thing in life that is more exhilarating and more positive a feeling than love is (p.150).

 

 



[1] Goleman, Daniel ( ) Emotional Intelligence: Why it Can Matter More Than IQ,New York: Bantam

Books.

 

[2] Kouzes, James M. and Posner, Barry Z. The Leadership Challenge, San Francisco: John Wiley & Songs, Inc.

 

[3] Kouzes and Posner (1999) Encouraging the Heart: A Leader’s Guide to Rewarding and Recognizing Others, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, Inc.

The post The H.E.A.R.T. of the matter appeared first on VM Learning.


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